The Manila Times

China slaps sanctions on US

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BEIJING: China suspended US warship visits and sanctioned American NGOs on Monday in retaliatio­n for the passage of a bill backing pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong.

The financial hub has been rocked by nearly six months of increasing­ly violent unrest demanding greater autonomy, which Beijing has frequently blamed on

Last week US President Donald

Trump signed the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, which requires the president to annually review the city’s favorable trade status and threatens to revoke it if the semi-autonomous territory’s freedoms are quashed.

The move came as the world’s two biggest economies have been

deal in their protracted trade war.

“In response to the unreasonab­le behavior of the US side, the Chinese government has decided to suspend reviewing the applicatio­ns for US warships to go to Hong Kong for (rest and) recuperati­on as of today,” Foreign Ministry Spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said

China had already denied requests for two US Navy ships to dock in Hong Kong in August, without specifying a reason why.

Behaving ‘badly’

Hua said they would also apply sanctions to a number of US-based NGOs, although failed to give any

would take.

Sanctions will apply to NGOs that had acted “badly” over the recent unrest in Hong Kong, she said, including the National Endowment for Democracy, Human Rights Watch and Freedom House.

There was “already a large amount of facts and evidence that make it clear that these non-gov

anti- China” forces and “incite separatist activities for Hong Kong independen­ce,” Hua added.

She accused them of having “great responsibi­lity for the chaotic situation in Hong Kong.”

Protesters in Hong Kong are pushing for greater democratic freedoms and police accountabi­lity, but the city’s pro-Beijing leadership has refused any major political concession­s.

The increasing­ly violent rallies have hammered the retail and tourism sectors, with mainland Chinese visitors abandoning the city in droves.

The city’s finance chief warned Monday that Hong Kong is set to record its first budget deficit in 15 years.

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